On the JoBlo Movies YouTube channel, we will be posting one full movie every day of the week, giving viewers the chance to watch them entirely free of charge. Today’s Free Movie of the Day is writer/director Martin Gooch’s 2018 post-apocalyptic sci-fi movie Atomic Apocalypse, and you can watch it over on the YouTube channel linked above, or you can just watch it in the embed at the top of this article.
Atomic Apocalypse has the following synopsis, provided by Gooch himself:
In Post Apocalyptic North America, one family fights for survival in this sci-i road trip of epic proportions in a nightmare world without gasoline, electricity, or humanity. Sheltered mother Kate loses her injured survivalist husband Sam, and love struck daughter Suzi in a matter of days after they join handsome loner Joe in search of a rumored hidden nuclear bunker full of food and medicine. Suddenly alone and lost,...
Atomic Apocalypse has the following synopsis, provided by Gooch himself:
In Post Apocalyptic North America, one family fights for survival in this sci-i road trip of epic proportions in a nightmare world without gasoline, electricity, or humanity. Sheltered mother Kate loses her injured survivalist husband Sam, and love struck daughter Suzi in a matter of days after they join handsome loner Joe in search of a rumored hidden nuclear bunker full of food and medicine. Suddenly alone and lost,...
- 9/6/2022
- by Cody Hamman
- JoBlo.com
Stars: Krista DeMille, Andrea Sweeney-Blanco, Jesús Lloveras, William Mark McCullough, Ron Roggé, Christina DeRosa, Neil Dickson, Domenica Cameron-Scorsese, Lex Anastasia, Andrea R. Baker, Cory Birkenbuel, Ryder Kole Emerson, Nicholas Fabrio, Ice Fox, Randy Granstrom | Written and Directed by Martin Gooch
Previously named Black Flowers (the title under which it screened at Sci-Fi London a couple of years ago), the newly titled Atomic Apocalypse, directed and written by Martin Gooch (The Gatehouse), is a post-apocalyptic science-fiction film set in the broken terrain of North America.
Atomic Apocalypse follows a family on their journey to survive the harsh new world they find themselves in. The lead performance comes from Krista DeMille (Distance) as Kate, who, along with her husband Sam, played by Ron Rogge (Stranger Things) and daughter Suzy (Andrea Sweeney), find themselves in trouble when Sam is injured by a run-in with a gang of bandits. They meet Joe, who joins them on their travels.
Previously named Black Flowers (the title under which it screened at Sci-Fi London a couple of years ago), the newly titled Atomic Apocalypse, directed and written by Martin Gooch (The Gatehouse), is a post-apocalyptic science-fiction film set in the broken terrain of North America.
Atomic Apocalypse follows a family on their journey to survive the harsh new world they find themselves in. The lead performance comes from Krista DeMille (Distance) as Kate, who, along with her husband Sam, played by Ron Rogge (Stranger Things) and daughter Suzy (Andrea Sweeney), find themselves in trouble when Sam is injured by a run-in with a gang of bandits. They meet Joe, who joins them on their travels.
- 1/31/2020
- by Chris Cummings
- Nerdly
Martin Gooch’S Atomic Apocalypse To Play Theaters; Gets DVD/Digital Release Feb 11 Acclaimed award-winning sci-fi epic Atomic Apocalypse premieres On Demand and Disc this February from High Octane Pictures Described by critics as both an “absolute joy” (CNN) and “eccentric & effervescent” (Projected Figures), the electrifying film is set a post-apocalyptic world where a woman …
The post Atomic Apocalypse Zombie-film gets big-screen release/DVD and Digital this February! appeared first on Hnn | Horrornews.net.
The post Atomic Apocalypse Zombie-film gets big-screen release/DVD and Digital this February! appeared first on Hnn | Horrornews.net.
- 1/30/2020
- by Adrian Halen
- Horror News
Following a nuclear apocalypse, new lines have been drawn in the sands of civilian life, and some shouldn't be crossed in Martin Gooch's new film Atomic Apocalypse, especially when the welcome mat consists of two skulls and a blood-lettered sign. Ahead of its February release from High Octane Pictures, we've been provided with an exclusive clip to share with Daily Dead readers that follows a trio of survivors into the land of the flesh eaters.
You can see how the flesh eaters react to new visitors in our exclusive clip below, and keep an eye out for Atomic Apocalypse when it comes to VOD and DVD on February 4th from High Octane Pictures:
"Acclaimed award-winning sci-fi epic Atomic Apocalypse premieres On Demand and Disc this February from High Octane Pictures
Described by critics as both an “absolute joy” (CNN) and “eccentric & effervescent” (Projected Figures), the electrifying film is set...
You can see how the flesh eaters react to new visitors in our exclusive clip below, and keep an eye out for Atomic Apocalypse when it comes to VOD and DVD on February 4th from High Octane Pictures:
"Acclaimed award-winning sci-fi epic Atomic Apocalypse premieres On Demand and Disc this February from High Octane Pictures
Described by critics as both an “absolute joy” (CNN) and “eccentric & effervescent” (Projected Figures), the electrifying film is set...
- 1/22/2020
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Stars: Scarlett Rayner, Simeon Willis, Linal Haft, Paul Freeman, Melissa Knatchbull | Written and Directed by Martin Gooch
Jack, a single father (Simeon Willis) looking to get way from the ghost of his dead wife, literally and figuratively, moves into a secluded gatehouse on the edge of a forest to work on a novel and maintain a relationship with his daughter. His daughter, 10-year-old Eternity, loves digging for treasure in the forest behind her house. In a coincidental turn of fate, Jack agrees to undertake a writing project about the ‘legend of the black flowers’ at the same time that Eternity discovers a mysterious object in the woods, and the forest wants it back.
The Gatehouse is a very simple premise brought down by a lack of restraint. Tropes abound. Take a drink every time you see a grieving single parent, mischievous child, creepy neighbor, drunken party girls, ghost, witches… you...
Jack, a single father (Simeon Willis) looking to get way from the ghost of his dead wife, literally and figuratively, moves into a secluded gatehouse on the edge of a forest to work on a novel and maintain a relationship with his daughter. His daughter, 10-year-old Eternity, loves digging for treasure in the forest behind her house. In a coincidental turn of fate, Jack agrees to undertake a writing project about the ‘legend of the black flowers’ at the same time that Eternity discovers a mysterious object in the woods, and the forest wants it back.
The Gatehouse is a very simple premise brought down by a lack of restraint. Tropes abound. Take a drink every time you see a grieving single parent, mischievous child, creepy neighbor, drunken party girls, ghost, witches… you...
- 10/4/2018
- by Nik Holman
- Nerdly
Stars: Scarlett Rayner, Simeon Willis, Linal Haft, Paul Freeman, Melissa Knatchbull | Written and Directed by Martin Gooch
Jack, a single father (Simon Willis) looking to get way from the ghost of his dead wife, literally and figuratively, moves into a secluded gatehouse on the edge of a forest to work on a novel and maintain a relationship with his daughter. His daughter, 10-year-old Eternity, loves digging for treasure in the forest behind her house. In a coincidental turn of fate, Jack agrees to undertake a writing project about the ‘legend of the black flowers’ at the same time that Eternity discovers a mysterious object in the woods, and the forest wants it back.
The Gatehouse is a very simple premise brought down by a lack of restraint. Tropes abound. Take a drink every time you see a grieving single parent, mischievous child, creepy neighbor, drunken party girls, ghost, witches… you...
Jack, a single father (Simon Willis) looking to get way from the ghost of his dead wife, literally and figuratively, moves into a secluded gatehouse on the edge of a forest to work on a novel and maintain a relationship with his daughter. His daughter, 10-year-old Eternity, loves digging for treasure in the forest behind her house. In a coincidental turn of fate, Jack agrees to undertake a writing project about the ‘legend of the black flowers’ at the same time that Eternity discovers a mysterious object in the woods, and the forest wants it back.
The Gatehouse is a very simple premise brought down by a lack of restraint. Tropes abound. Take a drink every time you see a grieving single parent, mischievous child, creepy neighbor, drunken party girls, ghost, witches… you...
- 12/1/2017
- by Nik Holman
- Nerdly
Premiering on digital this December An ancient curse is unlocked in The Gatehouse, on VOD 12/5 from Uncork’d Entertainment. From award-winning director Martin Gooch comes a bold and arresting gothic horror feature that’ll stir the senses and spike the neck hairs. Jack is a struggling writer recovering from the death of his wife. His daughter, …
The post Do you dare enter “The Gatehouse”? first appeared on Hnn | Horrornews.net 2017 - Official Horror News Site...
The post Do you dare enter “The Gatehouse”? first appeared on Hnn | Horrornews.net 2017 - Official Horror News Site...
- 11/14/2017
- by Horrornews.net
- Horror News
Sideshow Collectibles has added another imposing (and beautifully crafted) character to the ranks of their Court of the Dead with the new Mortighull Premium Format Figure that's featured in today's Horror Highlights, which also includes an update on Space Goat Productions' Evil Dead 2 Kickstarter campaign, a teaser trailer for Lilith (starring Jessica Cameron), a new clip from the anthology series By Night: Origins, details on the world premiere of The Redeeming, the first short film from the new anthology series Ao-Terror-Oa, The Gatehouse release info, the cast for Killer Kate!, and UK and Ireland release details for Whispers.
Sideshow Reveals New Reaper Premium Format Figure: From Sideshow: "Sideshow is proud to present Mortighull: The Risen Reaper General Premium Format™Figure, a terrifying new addition to our original Court of the Dead collection…
The Reaper General Mortighull is far from a mirror image of his mentor, the resolute Demithyle. Mortighull...
Sideshow Reveals New Reaper Premium Format Figure: From Sideshow: "Sideshow is proud to present Mortighull: The Risen Reaper General Premium Format™Figure, a terrifying new addition to our original Court of the Dead collection…
The Reaper General Mortighull is far from a mirror image of his mentor, the resolute Demithyle. Mortighull...
- 11/3/2017
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Under Executive director Roger Durling, the Santa Barbara International Film Festival has flourished by riding the awards season wave via starry onstage interviews with Oscar contenders.
Every year, screenwriters, directors and producers promote their causes on panels, and the likes of Jeff Bridges (a local), Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling, Denzel Washington, and Casey Affleck and Michelle Williams submit to in-depth tributes from Leonard Maltin and Pete Hammond, among others. This year I had the pleasure of a wide-ranging conversation with Best Actress Oscar-nominee Isabelle Huppert. (See video excerpts below.)
And Saturday, the festival wound up its 32nd edition by handing out its annual jury prizes. All eleven are listed below.
The Audience Choice Award went to Yonatan Nir’s “My Hero Brother,” which also took home the Best Documentary Award. It tells the story of a group of young people with Down syndrome who embarking on an arduous trek through the Himalayas.
Every year, screenwriters, directors and producers promote their causes on panels, and the likes of Jeff Bridges (a local), Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling, Denzel Washington, and Casey Affleck and Michelle Williams submit to in-depth tributes from Leonard Maltin and Pete Hammond, among others. This year I had the pleasure of a wide-ranging conversation with Best Actress Oscar-nominee Isabelle Huppert. (See video excerpts below.)
And Saturday, the festival wound up its 32nd edition by handing out its annual jury prizes. All eleven are listed below.
The Audience Choice Award went to Yonatan Nir’s “My Hero Brother,” which also took home the Best Documentary Award. It tells the story of a group of young people with Down syndrome who embarking on an arduous trek through the Himalayas.
- 2/11/2017
- by Anne Thompson
- Thompson on Hollywood
Under Executive director Roger Durling, the Santa Barbara International Film Festival has flourished by riding the awards season wave via starry onstage interviews with Oscar contenders.
Every year, screenwriters, directors and producers promote their causes on panels, and the likes of Jeff Bridges (a local), Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling, Denzel Washington, and Casey Affleck and Michelle Williams submit to in-depth tributes from Leonard Maltin and Pete Hammond, among others. This year I had the pleasure of a wide-ranging conversation with Best Actress Oscar-nominee Isabelle Huppert. (See video excerpts below.)
And Saturday, the festival wound up its 32nd edition by handing out its annual jury prizes. All eleven are listed below.
The Audience Choice Award went to Yonatan Nir’s “My Hero Brother,” which also took home the Best Documentary Award. It tells the story of a group of young people with Down syndrome who embarking on an arduous trek through the Himalayas.
Every year, screenwriters, directors and producers promote their causes on panels, and the likes of Jeff Bridges (a local), Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling, Denzel Washington, and Casey Affleck and Michelle Williams submit to in-depth tributes from Leonard Maltin and Pete Hammond, among others. This year I had the pleasure of a wide-ranging conversation with Best Actress Oscar-nominee Isabelle Huppert. (See video excerpts below.)
And Saturday, the festival wound up its 32nd edition by handing out its annual jury prizes. All eleven are listed below.
The Audience Choice Award went to Yonatan Nir’s “My Hero Brother,” which also took home the Best Documentary Award. It tells the story of a group of young people with Down syndrome who embarking on an arduous trek through the Himalayas.
- 2/11/2017
- by Anne Thompson
- Indiewire
Martin Gooch’s film about an obsessive search for a lost brother throws out a barrage of whimsy but racks up too little emotion tension
Douglas Adams paperbacks and Time Bandits posters – writer-director Martin Gooch likes to put well-thumbed influences to use as onscreen props. But while his 2013 sci-fi comedy, getting a belated release, bubbles with nerdy zeal, it can’t quite bottle the pathos of Terry Gilliam’s irrepressible dreamers. David Jones, played by Gooch, is a fortysomething kidult using a £60,000 lottery win to fund his obsessive search for the brother he believes, to the exasperation of everyone around him, was abducted by aliens as a child. Fondly teasing UFO conspiracy theorists and tabletop-gaming hobbyists, The Search for Simon’s whimsy barrage is admirably detailed – from a fake BBFC certificate to comedy acronyms (British AeroSpace Technology Advanced Research Development Division). But the film waits too long before permitting us...
Douglas Adams paperbacks and Time Bandits posters – writer-director Martin Gooch likes to put well-thumbed influences to use as onscreen props. But while his 2013 sci-fi comedy, getting a belated release, bubbles with nerdy zeal, it can’t quite bottle the pathos of Terry Gilliam’s irrepressible dreamers. David Jones, played by Gooch, is a fortysomething kidult using a £60,000 lottery win to fund his obsessive search for the brother he believes, to the exasperation of everyone around him, was abducted by aliens as a child. Fondly teasing UFO conspiracy theorists and tabletop-gaming hobbyists, The Search for Simon’s whimsy barrage is admirably detailed – from a fake BBFC certificate to comedy acronyms (British AeroSpace Technology Advanced Research Development Division). But the film waits too long before permitting us...
- 12/1/2016
- by Phil Hoad
- The Guardian - Film News
Stars: Martin Gooch, Noeleen Comiskey, Sophie Aldred, Julian Bastida, Simon Birks, Jen Brown, Brooke Burfitt, Lucy Clements, Carol Cleveland, Emma Cornell, Joe Dutch | Written by Martin Gooch, Simon Birks | Directed by Martin Gooch
David Jones (Martin Gooch) is a man with a mission; to find his brother, Simon, who was abducted by aliens nearly 30 years ago. Fed tips about UFOs by an American ‘ufologist’ AlienFromArcturas in exchange for cash, David travels in search of UFOs to places like Denmark and Utah, or wherever his tips take him. Unfortunately, they tend not to lead to anything, and while his obsession alienates his friends at home, he meets and befriends psychiatrist/author Eloise Eldritch (Noeleen Comiskey) and Angela (Sophie Aldred) and soon remembers more about Simon’s disappearance than what his dad told him as a child.
I’ll be honest, the opening 5 minutes of The Search For Simon made me audibly groan.
David Jones (Martin Gooch) is a man with a mission; to find his brother, Simon, who was abducted by aliens nearly 30 years ago. Fed tips about UFOs by an American ‘ufologist’ AlienFromArcturas in exchange for cash, David travels in search of UFOs to places like Denmark and Utah, or wherever his tips take him. Unfortunately, they tend not to lead to anything, and while his obsession alienates his friends at home, he meets and befriends psychiatrist/author Eloise Eldritch (Noeleen Comiskey) and Angela (Sophie Aldred) and soon remembers more about Simon’s disappearance than what his dad told him as a child.
I’ll be honest, the opening 5 minutes of The Search For Simon made me audibly groan.
- 10/5/2014
- by Nicky Johnson
- Nerdly
The American Film Market was once all eye-catching gimmicks – these days it's robust, ruddy-cheeked, and focused on enterprise
There's a woman feeding a baby in the lobby of the Loews hotel in Santa Monica. Nothing unusual in that, you might think, except that this is the second day of the American Film Market, an event that doesn't generally conjure up images of swaddled newborns. With almost 8,000 attendees, from more than 70 countries, there was barely room to move around the hotel's atrium – but this year's Afm feels strikingly different from previous markets.
Gone are the hordes of almost-naked women in leopard-print bikinis, salesmen in Comic-Conesque fancy dress, and other eye-catching gimmicks. (Although, naturally, Ron Jeremy brought some scantily-clad babes with him when he appeared at a TromaDance press conference.) No, this year, the Afm has been robust, ruddy-cheeked, and all about the business.
Previous post-recession years haven't been so buoyant but the Afm's managing director,...
There's a woman feeding a baby in the lobby of the Loews hotel in Santa Monica. Nothing unusual in that, you might think, except that this is the second day of the American Film Market, an event that doesn't generally conjure up images of swaddled newborns. With almost 8,000 attendees, from more than 70 countries, there was barely room to move around the hotel's atrium – but this year's Afm feels strikingly different from previous markets.
Gone are the hordes of almost-naked women in leopard-print bikinis, salesmen in Comic-Conesque fancy dress, and other eye-catching gimmicks. (Although, naturally, Ron Jeremy brought some scantily-clad babes with him when he appeared at a TromaDance press conference.) No, this year, the Afm has been robust, ruddy-cheeked, and all about the business.
Previous post-recession years haven't been so buoyant but the Afm's managing director,...
- 11/13/2012
- by Lisa Marks
- The Guardian - Film News
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